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10/8/2013 1 Social Media Competencies for Medical Educators Martha S. Grayson, MD Albert Einstein College of Medicine Katherine Chretien, MD George Washington University Objectives Discuss professionalism issues surrounding social media use in medical education. Identify opportunities for training faculty in social media use. Discuss baseline competencies in the use of social media by medical school faculty. The Four Faculty Generations Silent generation Baby Boomers Gen X Millennials Wikipedia defines social media as: primarily Internet-based tools for sharing and discussing information among human beings refers to activities that integrate technology, social interaction, and the construction of words, pictures, videos and audio. depends on the varied perspectives and “building” of shared meaning among communities, as people share their stories and experiences
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Objectives Social Media Competencies for Discuss ...€¦ · Social Media” •Understand generational differences in technology/social media use and views on professionalism •Understand

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Page 1: Objectives Social Media Competencies for Discuss ...€¦ · Social Media” •Understand generational differences in technology/social media use and views on professionalism •Understand

10/8/2013

1

Social Media Competencies for

Medical Educators

Martha S. Grayson, MD Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Katherine Chretien, MD George Washington University

Objectives

• Discuss professionalism issues surrounding social media use in medical education.

• Identify opportunities for training faculty in

social media use.

• Discuss baseline competencies in the use of social media by medical school faculty.

The Four Faculty Generations

Silent generation

Baby Boomers

Gen X Millennials

Wikipedia defines social media as:

• primarily Internet-based tools for sharing and

discussing information among human beings

• refers to activities that integrate technology,

social interaction, and the construction of words, pictures, videos and audio.

• depends on the varied perspectives and

“building” of shared meaning among communities, as people share their stories and experiences

Page 2: Objectives Social Media Competencies for Discuss ...€¦ · Social Media” •Understand generational differences in technology/social media use and views on professionalism •Understand

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Swiss Cows Send Texts to Announce

They’re in Heat New York Times 10-2-12

• Christian Oesch is

testing a device that sends an

SMS to his phone when a cow is

sexually active

Uses of Social

Media for Faculty

Communication

Medical Education

Organization/

Course Branding

Personal Branding

Professional Growth

Patient Education

Public Relations

Survey of Einstein Medical Students

n=496 1 = never 2 = occasionally

3 = regularly

4 = frequently

5 = very frequently

How often do you use each of the following social media services?

1 = not at all 2 = beginner

3 = competent

4 = highly competent

How competent are you at using each of the following social media services? Which of the following types of information have you seen

posted online by a classmate? Check all answers that apply.

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Professionalism and social media

Physician Patient Physician Physician Patient Patient

Personal connections

THE PUBLIC

Physicians Patients

Last winter, in the middle of my intern year, I became Facebook friends with a young

man who was dying in the intensive-care unit.

Vitals.com: “where doctors are examined”

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Professional growth

Disseminate research

Share information

Establish expertise

Hone writing

Reputation

Students using social media to galvanize a patient safety movement

Henderson et al, J Patient Saf, March 2010.

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HIPAA pitfalls lie in the pieces

Survey Questions Yes (%)

Aware of incidents of students posting

unprofessional content? 60

Pt privacy violations 13

Conflicts of interest 4

Profanity 52

Discriminatory language 48

Depicted intoxication 40

Sexually suggestive 38

Chretien K, et al. JAMA. 2009;302(12):1309-1315.

92% reported online professionalism violations

Inappropriate contact with patients (69%)

Misrepresentation of credentials or clinical outcomes (60%)

Inappropriate prescribing (63%)

Greysen SR, et al. JAMA.2012;307(11):1141-2.

92% reported online professionalism violations

71% held formal disciplinary proceedings

License limitation (44%)

License revocation (21%)

License suspension (29%)

Greysen SR, et al. JAMA.2012;307(11):1141-2.

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AMA Guidelines: Proceed cautiously

Hypothetical Student-Posted Online Content

Never or Rarely

Acceptable %

Photo of student holding an alcoholic beverage 77

Depicted intoxication 93

Comment containing profanity 94

Description of a de-identified patient encounter (respectful tone)

61

Description of a de-identified patient encounter (negative tone)

86

Disparaging remarks about profession 76

Chretien K, et al., Acad Med. 2011 Dec;86(12):1545-50.

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Baseline social media

competencies for faculty

Generated at AAMC 2012 session

“What Faculty Should Know about

Social Media”

• Understand generational differences in technology/social media use and views on

professionalism

• Understand privacy and security issues pertaining to social media use

• Familiarity with social media policies – both from major medical organizations and specific to

local institution

From AAMC 2012 session “What Faculty

Should Know about Social Media” • Identify preferred social media tools for medical

education

• Demonstrate social media literacy

▫ Familiarity with social media tools and their purpose

▫ Know vocabulary, abbreviations

▫ Actually use at least one tool

• Recognize principles of using social media

responsibly

Any additional competencies? Faculty Development Programs-

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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IMAP/Macy Grant:

Social Media and Professionalism 1. To educate faculty on social media use in

medicine

2. To provide an opportunity for students to learn

about the benefits and challenges of social media use

3. To enable students to determine whether social

media use by our patient population can be used to improve health

Programs to enhance the social media

skills of faculty • Full or half day educational symposia • Course specific programs • Free standing workshops

• Programs supported by: ▫ Institute on Medicine as a Profession and the

Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation ▫ Office of Faculty Development ▫ Office of Medical Education

Educational Symposia

• Davidoff Education Day- Social Media in Medical Education: the Promise and the Perils ▫ Educating Physicians in the 21st Century: Twitter,

Facebook and Digital Medicine- Kent Bottles, MD

▫ The Road to Professionalism in the Digital Age- Katherine Chretien, MD

• Health Care Social Media in the Digital Age ▫ Farris Timimi, MD

• Social Media and Medicine: Perfect Match or Perfect Storm? ▫ Susannah Fox and Kevin Pho, MD

Course Specific Faculty Development

• Professionalism in the connected age: Teaching Medical Students about Social Media ▫ David Stern, MD, PhD & Allison Fine, MPA ▫ Workshops with cases focused on blog posts, Facebook

HIPAA compliance

• Geared to small group leaders and preceptors in courses

involved with social media curriculum ▫ Introduction to Clinical Medicine- years 1 & 2 ▫ Bioethics- years 1 & 2 ▫ Patient, Doctors and Communities – year 3

Workshops- freestanding and part of

educational symposia • Twitter to Tenure

• Social Media in Medical Education: how can we bridge the current generation gap

• How to Use Social Media in UME and GME

• Understanding Social Media for the Curious

Novice

• Smart Phones, Savvy MDs: information on the

move

• Taking Twitter to the Next Level

Competencies Strategies to obtain competency Time Frame

Social Media Personal Faculty Development Plan

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Wrap Up and Next Steps

• http://socialmediainmeded.blogspot.com